How to upload a file
Files can be sent as is:
<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
<body>
<input type="file" onchange="upload(this.files)" />
<script src="/path/to/socket.io.js"></script>
<script>
const socket = io();
function upload(files) {
socket.emit("upload", files[0], (status) => {
console.log(status);
});
}
</script>
</body>
</html>
The file will be received as a Buffer on the server side:
import { writeFile } from "fs";
io.on("connection", (socket) => {
socket.on("upload", (file, callback) => {
console.log(file); // <Buffer 25 50 44 ...>
// save the content to the disk, for example
writeFile("/tmp/upload", file, (err) => {
callback({ message: err ? "failure" : "success" });
});
});
});
Additional notes​
maxHttpBufferSize
limit​
While uploading a file, you might reach the maxHttpBufferSize
value, which is the maximum allowed message size in bytes. It defaults to 1 MB.
You can increase this value, according to your use case:
import { Server } from "socket.io";
const io = new Server({
maxHttpBufferSize: 1e8 // 100 MB
});
Reference: maxHttpBufferSize
option
Over the wire​
Like other binary structures (ArrayBuffer, Blob), the arguments of the emit()
method will be sent as two WebSocket frames over the wire:
First, a text frame:
451-["upload",{"_placeholder":true,"num":0}]
||||└─ JSON-encoded payload with placeholders for binary attachments
||||
|||└─ separator
||└─ number of binary attachments
|└─ socket.io BINARY EVENT packet type
└─ engine.io MESSAGE packet type
And then a binary frame (one per binary structure):
<0x25 0x50 0x44 ...>
Depending on your use case, you may change this behavior by using a custom parser.